The Levant News — Dozens of people have been killed and scores injured in two blasts at a peace rally in the Turkish capital, Ankara, officials said. According to the Turkish government, the explosions appeared to be the result of suicide bomb attacks.

The death toll from the tragedy has reached 86, Reuters cited Turkish Health Minister Mehmet Muezzinoglu as saying.
He also confirmed that at least 186 people have been injured in the incident, with 28 of them in intensive care.

According to local media, the explosion took place near Ankara Central railway station, the busiest in Turkey, which serves 181 trains daily. Several ambulances have been reportedly seen at the scene.

According to Lami Ozgen, head of the Confederation of Public Sector Trade Unions, or KESK, the bombs “exploded in very short intervals,” AP reported.

The explosions occurred at a rally dubbed “Labor, Peace, Democracy” that kicked off at 10:00 local time (0700 GMT). Turkey’s largest trade unions were planning to get together for a demonstration to protest the Turkish government’s renewed military campaign against Kurdish rebels.

Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu is to hold meeting with security officials following the tragedy, his office said.

“We are investigating the explosion and will share our findings with the public as soon as possible,” a Turkish official told AFP.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has commented on the attack, calling for “solidarity and determination as the most meaningful response to terror.”

The hashtag #Ankaradayız (We are Ankara) has been used in 35,000 retweets in the hours since the attack.

Thorbjørn Jagland, Secretary General of the Council of Europe, condemned the attack.

“The news from Ankara this morning is shocking and disturbing. This is a ruthless and barbaric attack on peaceful demonstrators. I express my condolences to all who have lost their friends and loved ones. Freedom of assembly and freedom of expression are fundamental pillars of democracy,” he said.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has sent his condolences to Turkish President Tayyip Recep Erdogan over the Ankara tragedy, the Kremlin press service said in a statement.

In his telegram, Putin expressed the hope “that the perpetrators of this cynical crime would be brought to justice, and confirmed readiness for close cooperation with the Turkish authorities in the fight against the terrorist threat,” the statement added.

Shortly after the attack, the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) announced it was planning to halt its activity in Turkey, a news website close to the PKK.

Turkey’s pro-Kurdish opposition Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) claimed that their members were especially targeted in the deadly explosions.

“Just after the beginning of the march, at about 10:04 a.m., two bomb attacks occurred among the HDP cortege. For this reason, it is understood that the main target of the attacks was the HDP,” the party said.“Many of the injured people are heavily injured, so there is a fear that the number of dead people may increase.”

No one has claimed responsibility for the terrorist attack, but it comes amid renewed fighting between Turkish security forces and Kurdish rebel forces.

In July at least 30 people were killed and over 100 injured in an explosion that struck a cultural center in the town of Suruc, southeast Turkey, near the Syrian border, in what the authorities called a “terrorist attack.”

The Kurds have been fighting Turkish authorities for several decades, demanding an independent state or at least greater autonomy. The Turkish Kurds’ main insurgent group, the PKK, considered as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US and NATO, was founded in 1978 and has been engaged in fighting with Turkey since 1984.

In September, the PKK claimed that its fighters had killed 15 Turkish soldiers in a surprise attack on an armored convoy.

Earlier this month, Turkey mounted a military assault on the city of Silvan, which has a mainly Kurdish population, killing at least 17 militants.